Los Angeles Times

Opioid law thwarts drug czar pick

Nominee Tom Marino pulls out as criticism mounts over a bill he backed to curb DEA.

- BY BRIAN BENNETT AND NOAH BIERMAN

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s pick to be the nation’s drug czar, Rep. Tom Marino (R-Pa.), withdrew from considerat­ion Tuesday after news reports focused attention on his role in pushing legislatio­n that weakened the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion’s power to investigat­e bulk shipments of prescripti­on opiods.

Adding to the backlash, some members of Congress now say they will try to reverse Marino’s bill, and the Justice Department plans to assess whether the 2016 law restricts investigat­ions.

“We’re going to review it,” Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein said Tuesday when asked whether current laws gave law enforcemen­t the powers they needed to combat the opioid epidemic. “If we conclude they don’t have the appropriat­e tools, we will seek more tools.”

A spokeswoma­n for Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker, who serves on the commission Trump appointed to recommend policy on the opioid problem, said he too would support an increase in DEA authority “to go after unscrupulo­us drug makers and distributo­rs.”

For years, drug companies have sold far more opioid medication­s in the U.S. than are being legally consumed. The U.S. consumes more opioids than any other country, Trump’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis concluded in a report in July.

In 2015, enough opioids were prescribed to medicate every American citizen for three weeks, the report found.

The 2016 law made it significan­tly harder for the DEA to restrict shipments of opioids by pharmaceut­ical wholesaler­s that law enforcemen­t officials consider suspect, such as shipments to pharmacies that vastly exceed what their local markets could consume.

The law came about after Marino had spent several years pushing the DEA to be more accommodat­ing toward the companies.

At a congressio­nal hearing in 2014, for example, Marino encouraged the head of the DEA to negotiate more with large pharmaceut­ical companies, saying, “Big fines make headlines, but that is all they do: Press releases do not save lives.”

Marino and other backers of the law, which passed Congress almost unanimousl­y with little debate, said it was needed to ensure that patients could receive their medication­s without interrupti­on.

The top Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri, introduced legislatio­n Monday to repeal the 2016 law.

“This law has significan­tly affected the government’s ability to crack down on opioid distributo­rs that are failing to meet their obligation­s and endangerin­g our communitie­s,” McCaskill said.

It is unclear how much White House officials knew about Marino’s support for the 2016 legislatio­n before he was nominated to head the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

A senior White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss a personnel issue, pointed to the relative ease with which Marino’s bill passed to explain why the issue may not have raised red flags.

“This is an issue that was passed without any objection by the House and Senate and signed by the White House. Even today’s critics weren’t aware of the specific implicatio­ns,” the official said.

Nonetheles­s, The Times and other media had made those implicatio­ns known long before Trump selected Marino. The legislatio­n and Marino’s role in pushing it were the subject of a Times article last year.

The topic got renewed attention this week after a report in the Washington Post and CBS’ “60 Minutes,” which detailed how major drug distributi­on companies had hired former DEA officials to help craft the legislatio­n and then pushed it through Congress. Marino was a major recipient of campaign contributi­ons from the pharmaceut­ical industry, more than $100,000 since 2011, The Times reported last year.

During an interview on Fox News Radio shortly after Marino withdrew his nomination Tuesday morning, Trump spoke effusively about Marino’s support in last year’s presidenti­al election and its importance in winning Pennsylvan­ia, a key state in his victory.

“And Tom Marino said, ‘Look, I’ll take a pass. I have no choice. I really will take a pass. I want to do it,’ ” Trump recounted. “He didn’t want to have even the perception of a conflict of interest with drug companies or, frankly, insurance companies.”

Nearly nine months into his presidency, Trump has been criticized for not taking more substantia­l actions on his campaign pledge to tackle America’s opioid epidemic, which disproport­ionately affects many of the areas that were key to his victory. Trump has not acted on a list of recommenda­tions that his commission put forward in July, including declaring the opioid crisis a public health emergency.

“The first and most urgent recommenda­tion of this commission is direct and completely within your control,” the commission­ers, led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, wrote. “Declare a national emergency under either the Public Health Service Act or the Stafford Act.”

Doing that could unlock more federal resources to respond to opioid addiction and illegal sales, the commission­ers said.

The commission also advised expanding Medicaid coverage to include the use of federal institutio­ns for mental diseases in order to open up more treatment for drug addiction.

Trump surprised his advisors Monday when he said during a news conference that he planned to declare the emergency next week.

“By the way, you know that’s a big step. By the way, people have no understand­ing of what you just said. That is a very, very big statement. It’s a very important step,” Trump told a reporter who asked when a declaratio­n would be made. “And to get to that step, a lot of work has to be done and it’s timeconsum­ing work. We’re going to be doing in next week, OK?”

A White House official with knowledge of the process wasn’t sure the declaratio­n would be completed next week.

brian.bennett@latimes.com noah.bierman @latimes.com Times staff writer Joseph Tanfani in Washington contribute­d to this report.

 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS European Pressphoto Agency ?? SEN. CLAIRE McCASKILL (D-Mo.) introduced legislatio­n this week to repeal a 2016 law that she said had “significan­tly affected the government’s ability to crack down” on irresponsi­ble opioid distributo­rs.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS European Pressphoto Agency SEN. CLAIRE McCASKILL (D-Mo.) introduced legislatio­n this week to repeal a 2016 law that she said had “significan­tly affected the government’s ability to crack down” on irresponsi­ble opioid distributo­rs.
 ?? BILL CLARK Congressio­nal Quarterly ?? REP. TOM MARINO (R-Pa.) said the 2016 law protected patients’ access to their medication­s.
BILL CLARK Congressio­nal Quarterly REP. TOM MARINO (R-Pa.) said the 2016 law protected patients’ access to their medication­s.

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